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Lontong is an Bruneian dish made of compressed rice cake in the form of a cylinder wrapped inside a banana leaf, [1] [2] commonly found in Brunei, Malaysia, and Singapore.Rice is rolled inside a banana leaf and boiled, then cut into small cakes as a staple food replacement for steamed rice.
Lontong, coconut milk soup, shredded chayote, tempeh, tofu, hard-boiled egg, sambal and krupuk Lontong sayur (lit. vegetable rice cake) is an Indonesian traditional rice dish made of pieces of lontong served in coconut milk soup with shredded chayote , green bean , unripe jackfruit , tempeh , tofu , hard-boiled egg , sambal and krupuk .
A mixture of vegetables, tofu, tempeh, lontong rice cake, beansprouts with petis black fish paste sauce and slices of boiled cow's lips. Rujak juhi: Betawi and Chinese Indonesian Vegetables with salted cuttlefish A mixture of vegetables, tofu, noodles, lontong rice cake, potato, and juhi salted cuttlefish served in spicy peanut sauce. Rujak ...
Oncom is also a selected filling for comro, lontong and arem-arem rice dumplings. Comro in particular is a popular Sundanese snack, the name was an abbreviation of oncom di jero which means "oncom inside".
Arem-arem is often described as a smaller size lontong with fillings, so it is sometimes also called lontong isi (lit. "filled lontong"). [ 1 ] It is common in Java , and often found in Indonesian marketplaces as jajan pasar ("market munchies"), a type of kue (snack) offered there.
Banana leaves are also used to wrap several kinds of snacks kue (delicacies), such as nagasari or kue pisang and otak-otak, and also to wrap pressed sticky-rice delicacies such as lemper and lontong. In Java, banana leaf is also used as a shallow conical bowl called "pincuk", usually to serve rujak tumbuk, pecel or satay.
Lotek. Lotek (alt. spelling: lothek, Javanese: ꦭꦺꦴꦛꦼꦏ꧀) is a Javanese (Indonesian) vegetable-based salad with peanut sauce. [1] While the sauce ingredients are the same with that of pecel, lotek sauce is typically much sweeter to taste, a nod to a classic "Matraman" (adj. belong to the Mataram Sultanate) cuisine.
Kolak pisang: banana kolak; Kolak radio: A Serang kolak made of banana, pineapple, kolang-kaling and rose apple but without coconut milk. [4] [5] Kolak singkong: cassava kolak; Kolak setup pisang: banana kolak without coconut milk but added cinnamon, pandanus leaf, and cloves. [6] Kolak ubi: diced sweet potato kolak; Kolak waluh/labu: pumpkin kolak